Health Update: The health and wellness trends set to dominate 2026: Contrast therapy, gut health and food traceability  - What Experts Say

Health Update: Health Update: The health and wellness trends set to dominate 2026: Contrast therapy, gut health and food traceability – What Experts Say– What Experts Say.

We’ve never known more about our health, thanks to a plethora of wearable technology and tracking devices which allow us to monitor everything from heart rate and sleep quality to brain waves and organ function.

But wellness in 2026 could see a return to the simple pillars of movement, rest and repair and looking within — specifically to the gut — to unlock physical and mental health and wellbeing.

After years of focus on self-optimisation and performance, experts believe 2026 could bring a more balanced approach to being well.

According to global consultancy The Future Laboratory, which recently released its top 50 trends for 2026, the health and wellness landscape is shifting focus from performance to presence – “prioritising empathy, community and the humans that shape the sector.

The Future Laboratory senior foresight analyst Alice Crossley said the industry was moving away from a fixation on optimisation.

“There is a shift happening towards something softer, more intuitive and balanced. Brands and businesses that acknowledge that often life takes precedence over performance will be the ones that resonate in 2026 and beyond,” she said.

Here are the trends we can expect to see more of in 2026.

Contrast therapy and connection

It’s a practice which dates back to ancient cultures, but a modern wave of entrepreneurs have brought contrast therapy to the masses amid a heightened focus on recovery, connection and holistic wellness.

Perth is home to a growing number of centres offering not only saunas and ice baths but compression boots, IV drips and red light therapy beds.

Camera IconReclab owner Pete Carbone, RecLab is a contrast therapy hub with ice baths, sauna, red light therapy Andrew Ritchie Credit: Andrew Ritchie/The West Australian

Inspired by a cherished weekly ritual of swims at City Beach with his dad, Pete Carbone set up a single ice bath in a gym storage room more than five years ago to help a friend who was struggling with their mental health.

Another ice bath followed, then a sauna, and Mr Carbone was quickly hooked by the sight of the revitalised, joyful faces that greeted him as they emerged from contrast therapy.

“Some were coming for physical recovery, some for mental health issues, and they were leaving with smiles on their faces,” he recalled.

“I’ll never forget a customer that brought his son in, and he said ‘I haven’t seen him look that lively in weeks.’ I thought, ‘there has to be something in this.’”

Mr Carbone flew across the country studying larger-scale recovery studios before embarking on an eight month search for the perfect property. He sold everything he owned after finding a run-down building in Wembley and spent months transforming it into his dream space, Reclab.

Red light therapy, RecLab is a contrast therapy hub with ice baths, sauna, red light therapy Picture: Andrew Ritchie
Camera IconRed light therapy, RecLab is a contrast therapy hub with ice baths, sauna, red light therapy Andrew Ritchie Credit: Andrew Ritchie/The West Australian

Reclab offers hot and cold plunge pools, a Finnish sauna, steam room, IV drips and red light therapy. For Mr Carbone, who hopes to open his second centre next year, it is the sense of community that he is most proud of.

“I think after COVID everyone thought, what can we do for ourselves on a regular basis that can help us not just maintain a good level of health, but increase our longevity?” he said.

“Now we have kids as young as 14 next to people in their 70s, we have AFL players, they are all sitting there chatting and I think what’s happening is these modalities are allowing people who wouldn’t necessarily spend time together, to do just that.

“There’s a connection beyond just getting hot or getting cold, you jump in and you look at the person next to you and it doesn’t matter who they are, you’re both freezing, and all of a sudden you have something in common.”

Reclab owner Pete Carbone with his dog Coco, RecLab is a contrast therapy hub with ice baths, sauna, red light therapy, Picture: Andrew Ritchie
Camera IconReclab owner Pete Carbone with his dog Coco, RecLab is a contrast therapy hub with ice baths, sauna, red light therapy, Andrew Ritchie Credit: Andrew Ritchie/The West Australian

Power of the gut

Often referred to as the second brain, the influence of the gut on mental and physical health and wellbeing is profound.

And the more scientists uncover about the gut microbiome — a complex eco-system of bacteria, viruses and fungi — the more it emerges as a key pillar of wellness.

At Perth’s Edith Cowan University, the Gut Health Research team is working on several studies to help understand the complex interaction between the gut microbiome and diet and disease.

Among them is Amanda Devine, professor of public health and nutrition, who said Australia’s reliance on highly processed foods was contributing to poor gut health.

Professors Claus Christopherson and Amanda Devine have created a new product called UrGut to help with digestion and gut health. They are pictured in their lab at ECU. Picture: Michael Wilson
Camera IconProfessors Claus Christopherson and Amanda Devine have created a new product called UrGut to help with digestion and gut health. They are pictured in their lab at ECU. Michael Wilson Credit: Michael Wilson/The West Australian

“A lot of people don’t eat enough vegetables and whole grains, and about a third to half the population don’t reach their fibre requirements,” Professor Devine explained.

“And then there’s the high protein diet that a lot of people are on, so they are removing foods that are really key to building and nourishing the microbiome.

“And you’ve got people who are on a poor Australian diet that is highly processed, or those with irritable bowel syndrome trying to change their diet so they have less symptoms and missing out on foods that are critical to better gut health.”

The team, including Professor Devine and Associate Professor Claus Christophersen, have recently launched their own product aimed at improving the gut health of Australians.

Professors Amanda Devine and Claus Christopherson have created a new product called UrGut to help with digestion and gut health. They are pictured in their lab at ECU. Picture: Michael Wilson
Camera IconProfessors Amanda Devine and Claus Christopherson have created a new product called UrGut to help with digestion and gut health. They are pictured in their lab at ECU. Michael Wilson Credit: Michael Wilson/The West Australian

Ur Gut is a dietary fibre powder containing resistant starch, which is vital to good gut health and contained in foods such as oats, rice, green bananas, beans, and legumes.

Professor Christophersen said with about 80 per cent of adults not meeting the recommended resistant starch intake, the product was an easy way to maintain gut health.

Clinical trials showed improved gut and mental health outcomes for patients living with IBS.

“Seventy per cent of your immune system sits around the gut, so when you start thinking about that, and what it means for our health, if we are constantly triggering our immune system it’s going to affect your whole body,” Professor Christophersen said.

AI-powered wearable tech

Wearable tracking technology continues to evolve, taking users well beyond measurements of step counts, heart rate and sleep quality.

But a move away from performance, to “preventative presence” is predicted according to The Future Laboratory.

“With self-responsibility reshaping attitudes to wellness, consumers are becoming more receptive to passive, always-on health technologies that promise early insights without friction,” its 2026 report reads.

“This shift reflects a broader mindset of preventative attunement – a desire to manage wellbeing continuously and unobtrusively, without the burden of constant self-tracking.”

This could look like wearable microsensors that attach to teeth to collect real-time biometric data, software, sustainable tampon products, software and laboratory diagnostics which deliver predictive reproductive care.